Thursday, November 29, 2007

Sally's first year

Sally Beauty reported it's first year results since being spun off from Alberto-Culver. I'd say the results are very encouraging. If you recall, the massive debt load from issuing a $25 a share dividend has been partially balanced by a significant tax savings. For the year:

Year                          2007    2006    2005    2004
Net interest expense       145,972      92   2,966   2,250
Provision for income taxes  38,121  69,916  73,154  62,059
That's a pretty significant tax savings, though not enough to offset the bigger interest expense. Sally's ability to finance the debt out of cash flow has improved:
Free cash flow             138,991 126,379  63,219 107,265
Free cash flow margin        5.53%   5.33%   2.80%   5.11%
In fact, all the margins (except net earnings) have improved:
Gross margin                45.90%  45.80%  45.56%  45.33%
Operating margin             9.09%   7.59%   8.54%   8.09%
Net margin                   1.77%   4.64%   5.17%   5.02%
One of the reasons for this is that Sally has improved its inventory picture:
Inventory DIO               152.82  163.15  156.17
Receivable DSO                7.46    6.99    6.53
Payable DPO                  47.41   50.12   44.94
Cash Conversion             112.87  120.03  117.76
A large part of these gains come because same store sales increased 4.5% despite losing L'Oreal products from BSG.

Overall, Sally Beauty is doing everything they need to do in order to make the special dividend gamble pay off. I'm quite happy to hang onto my shares while the company pays down debt and exploits its leverage.

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